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Question on downsizing
No, not the corporate type, the bait type.
You may or may not recall, but over the past year or so I've been here and asked about baits that up until now, I've never had much success with, like jigs, jig/pigs, soft jerkbaits (flukes and the like) and to some extent even spinnerbaits. I always pretty much fished worms (T and C rigged) and crankbaits with the occasional buzzbait and toothpick topwater bait when conditions were favorable when I fished as probably a toddler to a 20 y/o newlywed that got "out of the game" for over a decade. Onto the question. I've been able to catch a few fish on jigs, and jigs with trailers since getting back into the bass habit, but with the summer warmth and sheer amount of pressure on my home lakes (ramps are very busy, 7 days a week it seems), it seems that I can't even buy a nibble of late. So I guess I need to know when in this situation, what "downsized" size of lure do you go with? Do they make smaller versions of some of these crawfish shaped trailers like say the Yum brand? Can a standard sized Yum crawfish bait still be used effectively on smaller than 1/2 -3/8 oz jigs? Or, just maybe some advice on fishing a medium sized (14k acres), southern lake (NC specifically) and assume clear to slightly stained water, temps from 85º+ at the surface to mid-to-high 70's near the bottom of the fishable water column in said lake (fish seem to be hanging in the 12-20ft range, whether or not the 20ft depth is near the bottom, much deeper and catfish and stripers are all that seem to be caught). Also assume that there are tons of local publications that tell you where to fish in this lake, and that it gets fished 7 days a week, from February 1 to November 31 (no seasons here, but those are the "warmer months" in NC). Short of finding unknown holes (yeah, right) what are my best chances for pepping up this stagnant summer bite? Smaller baits as suggested? Different approach to presentation/speed? (Can you tell I'm about to spend the better part of my summer vacation on my bass boat? ;) LOL! Thanks for any insight. BTW, here is a link to the USA Corps of Engineers page on this lake http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/capefear.htm and here is a link that is *supposed* to be lake data for the past 24 hours (for level and temp info, mean level for this lake is around 216 ft AMSL IIRC) http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/bejrept.txt -- Remove nospam@ from email to reply. |
Question on downsizing
Three words. Charlie Brewer Sliders! Try them you won't get disappointed!
-- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "SimRacer" wrote in message .com... No, not the corporate type, the bait type. You may or may not recall, but over the past year or so I've been here and asked about baits that up until now, I've never had much success with, like jigs, jig/pigs, soft jerkbaits (flukes and the like) and to some extent even spinnerbaits. I always pretty much fished worms (T and C rigged) and crankbaits with the occasional buzzbait and toothpick topwater bait when conditions were favorable when I fished as probably a toddler to a 20 y/o newlywed that got "out of the game" for over a decade. Onto the question. I've been able to catch a few fish on jigs, and jigs with trailers since getting back into the bass habit, but with the summer warmth and sheer amount of pressure on my home lakes (ramps are very busy, 7 days a week it seems), it seems that I can't even buy a nibble of late. So I guess I need to know when in this situation, what "downsized" size of lure do you go with? Do they make smaller versions of some of these crawfish shaped trailers like say the Yum brand? Can a standard sized Yum crawfish bait still be used effectively on smaller than 1/2 -3/8 oz jigs? Or, just maybe some advice on fishing a medium sized (14k acres), southern lake (NC specifically) and assume clear to slightly stained water, temps from 85º+ at the surface to mid-to-high 70's near the bottom of the fishable water column in said lake (fish seem to be hanging in the 12-20ft range, whether or not the 20ft depth is near the bottom, much deeper and catfish and stripers are all that seem to be caught). Also assume that there are tons of local publications that tell you where to fish in this lake, and that it gets fished 7 days a week, from February 1 to November 31 (no seasons here, but those are the "warmer months" in NC). Short of finding unknown holes (yeah, right) what are my best chances for pepping up this stagnant summer bite? Smaller baits as suggested? Different approach to presentation/speed? (Can you tell I'm about to spend the better part of my summer vacation on my bass boat? ;) LOL! Thanks for any insight. BTW, here is a link to the USA Corps of Engineers page on this lake http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/capefear.htm and here is a link that is *supposed* to be lake data for the past 24 hours (for level and temp info, mean level for this lake is around 216 ft AMSL IIRC) http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/bejrept.txt -- Remove nospam@ from email to reply. |
Question on downsizing
Three words. Charlie Brewer Sliders! Try them you won't get disappointed!
-- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "SimRacer" wrote in message .com... No, not the corporate type, the bait type. You may or may not recall, but over the past year or so I've been here and asked about baits that up until now, I've never had much success with, like jigs, jig/pigs, soft jerkbaits (flukes and the like) and to some extent even spinnerbaits. I always pretty much fished worms (T and C rigged) and crankbaits with the occasional buzzbait and toothpick topwater bait when conditions were favorable when I fished as probably a toddler to a 20 y/o newlywed that got "out of the game" for over a decade. Onto the question. I've been able to catch a few fish on jigs, and jigs with trailers since getting back into the bass habit, but with the summer warmth and sheer amount of pressure on my home lakes (ramps are very busy, 7 days a week it seems), it seems that I can't even buy a nibble of late. So I guess I need to know when in this situation, what "downsized" size of lure do you go with? Do they make smaller versions of some of these crawfish shaped trailers like say the Yum brand? Can a standard sized Yum crawfish bait still be used effectively on smaller than 1/2 -3/8 oz jigs? Or, just maybe some advice on fishing a medium sized (14k acres), southern lake (NC specifically) and assume clear to slightly stained water, temps from 85º+ at the surface to mid-to-high 70's near the bottom of the fishable water column in said lake (fish seem to be hanging in the 12-20ft range, whether or not the 20ft depth is near the bottom, much deeper and catfish and stripers are all that seem to be caught). Also assume that there are tons of local publications that tell you where to fish in this lake, and that it gets fished 7 days a week, from February 1 to November 31 (no seasons here, but those are the "warmer months" in NC). Short of finding unknown holes (yeah, right) what are my best chances for pepping up this stagnant summer bite? Smaller baits as suggested? Different approach to presentation/speed? (Can you tell I'm about to spend the better part of my summer vacation on my bass boat? ;) LOL! Thanks for any insight. BTW, here is a link to the USA Corps of Engineers page on this lake http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/capefear.htm and here is a link that is *supposed* to be lake data for the past 24 hours (for level and temp info, mean level for this lake is around 216 ft AMSL IIRC) http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/bejrept.txt -- Remove nospam@ from email to reply. |
Question on downsizing
Cabela's has some living eye jigs that have been productive. I have fished them on 1/4 ounce heads with Berkely twin tail bungee grubs with a bit of success "D.Norton" wrote in message ... Three words. Charlie Brewer Sliders! Try them you won't get disappointed! -- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "SimRacer" wrote in message .com... No, not the corporate type, the bait type. You may or may not recall, but over the past year or so I've been here and asked about baits that up until now, I've never had much success with, like jigs, jig/pigs, soft jerkbaits (flukes and the like) and to some extent even spinnerbaits. I always pretty much fished worms (T and C rigged) and crankbaits with the occasional buzzbait and toothpick topwater bait when conditions were favorable when I fished as probably a toddler to a 20 y/o newlywed that got "out of the game" for over a decade. Onto the question. I've been able to catch a few fish on jigs, and jigs with trailers since getting back into the bass habit, but with the summer warmth and sheer amount of pressure on my home lakes (ramps are very busy, 7 days a week it seems), it seems that I can't even buy a nibble of late. So I guess I need to know when in this situation, what "downsized" size of lure do you go with? Do they make smaller versions of some of these crawfish shaped trailers like say the Yum brand? Can a standard sized Yum crawfish bait still be used effectively on smaller than 1/2 -3/8 oz jigs? Or, just maybe some advice on fishing a medium sized (14k acres), southern lake (NC specifically) and assume clear to slightly stained water, temps from 85º+ at the surface to mid-to-high 70's near the bottom of the fishable water column in said lake (fish seem to be hanging in the 12-20ft range, whether or not the 20ft depth is near the bottom, much deeper and catfish and stripers are all that seem to be caught). Also assume that there are tons of local publications that tell you where to fish in this lake, and that it gets fished 7 days a week, from February 1 to November 31 (no seasons here, but those are the "warmer months" in NC). Short of finding unknown holes (yeah, right) what are my best chances for pepping up this stagnant summer bite? Smaller baits as suggested? Different approach to presentation/speed? (Can you tell I'm about to spend the better part of my summer vacation on my bass boat? ;) LOL! Thanks for any insight. BTW, here is a link to the USA Corps of Engineers page on this lake http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/capefear.htm and here is a link that is *supposed* to be lake data for the past 24 hours (for level and temp info, mean level for this lake is around 216 ft AMSL IIRC) http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/bejrept.txt -- Remove nospam@ from email to reply. |
Question on downsizing
Cabela's has some living eye jigs that have been productive. I have fished them on 1/4 ounce heads with Berkely twin tail bungee grubs with a bit of success "D.Norton" wrote in message ... Three words. Charlie Brewer Sliders! Try them you won't get disappointed! -- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "SimRacer" wrote in message .com... No, not the corporate type, the bait type. You may or may not recall, but over the past year or so I've been here and asked about baits that up until now, I've never had much success with, like jigs, jig/pigs, soft jerkbaits (flukes and the like) and to some extent even spinnerbaits. I always pretty much fished worms (T and C rigged) and crankbaits with the occasional buzzbait and toothpick topwater bait when conditions were favorable when I fished as probably a toddler to a 20 y/o newlywed that got "out of the game" for over a decade. Onto the question. I've been able to catch a few fish on jigs, and jigs with trailers since getting back into the bass habit, but with the summer warmth and sheer amount of pressure on my home lakes (ramps are very busy, 7 days a week it seems), it seems that I can't even buy a nibble of late. So I guess I need to know when in this situation, what "downsized" size of lure do you go with? Do they make smaller versions of some of these crawfish shaped trailers like say the Yum brand? Can a standard sized Yum crawfish bait still be used effectively on smaller than 1/2 -3/8 oz jigs? Or, just maybe some advice on fishing a medium sized (14k acres), southern lake (NC specifically) and assume clear to slightly stained water, temps from 85º+ at the surface to mid-to-high 70's near the bottom of the fishable water column in said lake (fish seem to be hanging in the 12-20ft range, whether or not the 20ft depth is near the bottom, much deeper and catfish and stripers are all that seem to be caught). Also assume that there are tons of local publications that tell you where to fish in this lake, and that it gets fished 7 days a week, from February 1 to November 31 (no seasons here, but those are the "warmer months" in NC). Short of finding unknown holes (yeah, right) what are my best chances for pepping up this stagnant summer bite? Smaller baits as suggested? Different approach to presentation/speed? (Can you tell I'm about to spend the better part of my summer vacation on my bass boat? ;) LOL! Thanks for any insight. BTW, here is a link to the USA Corps of Engineers page on this lake http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/capefear.htm and here is a link that is *supposed* to be lake data for the past 24 hours (for level and temp info, mean level for this lake is around 216 ft AMSL IIRC) http://epec.saw.usace.army.mil/bejrept.txt -- Remove nospam@ from email to reply. |
Question on downsizing
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Question on downsizing
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Question on downsizing
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Question on downsizing
Okay Rich , 5 words, Drop Shot Charlie Brewers Sliders!
-- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "RichZ" wrote in message ... 2 words. Drop Shot RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
Question on downsizing
Okay Rich , 5 words, Drop Shot Charlie Brewers Sliders!
-- D.Norton Millennium Custom Rods "RichZ" wrote in message ... 2 words. Drop Shot RichZ© www.richz.com/fishing |
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